[...] Using an mp3 player that looks a little like the iRosary, Gianfranco Parati, head of cardiology at the Italian Auxology Institute, first tested the device on himself and fellow researchers. They tried it while atop Italy’s 4,000-meter high Monte Rosa to see if listening to music that synchronized and then slowed heartbeats would help the heart work more efficiently. [...]
[...] There’s already iRosary and other indie productizations, but I say when they folks start marketing prayer beads as value-added premiums and gift packs, I’ll vote it’s time to draw the line. [...]
[...] It certainly looks less clunky than the iRosary. [...]
[...] It certainly looks less clunky than the iRosary. [...]
[...] Using an mp3 player that looks a little like the iRosary, Gianfranco Parati, head of cardiology at the Italian Auxology Institute, first tested the device on himself and fellow researchers. They tried it while atop Italy’s 4,000-meter high Monte Rosa to see if listening to music that synchronized and then slowed heartbeats would help the heart work more efficiently. [...]
[...] There’s already iRosary and other indie productizations, but I say when they folks start marketing prayer beads as value-added premiums and gift packs, I’ll vote it’s time to draw the line. [...]